April 11th, 1888 — MoM Careers Day Tour — A Conference Room
Ernest had no idea why he'd been required to participate in this little field trip for the children. He wasn't particularly looking forward to interviewing potential candidates for the position of Unspeakable, and was hardly hoping to encourage more of them to pine after a career they weren't suited for and waste his time with unnecessary interviews. Even if he'd wanted to impress them, however, which there was no point in making any attempt to do, it wasn't as though he could tell them anything about what actually happened in the department.
But being the Assistant Head came with all sorts of things he didn't want to do, and this was just another of their number. Ernest had dutifully waited in the conference room while the students filed in. His own son was among them, but that hardly changed his overall opinion of their intelligence as a group. After giving a speech of about four minutes in length which mostly enumerated the security measures in place around the department — and therefore what might happen to them should they unexpectedly wander towards the Department of Mysteries while they were performing some other menial task here at the Ministry — he drew towards what he expected to be the conclusion of the little meeting.
"We do not liaise with other departments here at the Ministry, so unless you plan to attempt to become an Unspeakable, you will never know what occurs on our floor." The emphasis was on attempt; as he was chiefly responsible for conducting the interviews for new members of the Department of Mysteries and greatly resented the imposition on his time by those who were unsuitable, he had begun taking quite a bit of pleasure in verbally destroying applicants once they'd disappointed him. "Even the Minister of Magic is only privy to very brief updates on the natural of our work, and these messages are delivered to him personally. So I suppose perhaps one or two of you can hope to gain some insight in that way," he said with a dismissive shrug. "Anyone can aspire to be Minister, after all."
In Ernest's book the qualifications for Minister were significantly less than those required for his department; the election was a popularity contest and the actual position more tedious than useful. He had never understood Urquart's decision to leave the department to pursue the Minister's seat. He had no particular opinion on Minister Ross one way or the other, except his general derision towards those employed in law enforcement. It certainly didn't take brains to lead a collective of government-sanctioned thugs in bullying the population into preserving law and order.
Open to any students on the MoM field trip or their chaperones/professors.
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